The pictures, and possibly the verse, were done more than a year before Wodehouse was asked to supply the narrative. The American edition was issued by Macmillan, New York, from imported sheets, in December 1904.
William Tell Told Again was collected in the Wodehouse collection
The Eighteen-Carat Kid and Other Stories, which was published in the US in 1980. Regarding the book in the context of Wodehouse's works,
Evelyn Waugh wrote in 1961, "Collectors prize as bibliographical rarities such early works as
William Tell Told Again and
Swoop, but it is impossible to discern in them any promise of what was to come." However, Barry Phelps, in his book
P. G. Wodehouse: Man and Myth (1992), held a different view of both
William Tell Told Again and
The Swoop!: "Both books are early Wodehouse, writing rapidly for cash rather than art, giving them an exuberant, uninhibited freshness. He clearly enjoyed writing them and they are a marker for what is to come." In his 2003 book
Plum Sauce: A P. G. Wodehouse Companion,
Richard Usborne described
William Tell Told Again: "A short, cheerful narrative by Wodehouse, excellent colour pictures by Philip Dadd and excellent verse captions to the pictures, by John W. Houghton – very much the sort of expert verse Wodehouse himself was already writing, in
Punch and elsewhere." ==References==